Throughout the nineteenth century, New Orleans was repeatedly plagued by yellow fever epidemics. In this paper, cultural representations of yellow fever are considered in three novels: Baron Ludwig Von Reizenstein’s The Mysteries of New Orleans (1854-1855), George Washington Cable’s The Grandissimes (1880), and Mollie Evelyn Moore Davis’ The Queen’s Garden (1900). Because the etiology was unknown during the nineteenth century, yellow fever becomes a floating signifier on which to project the ills they observed in New Orleans society. Yellow fever thus becomes a representation of loose sexual mores, as well as a divinely retributive punishment for slavery, or a sign of adherence to an unequal, antiquated, aristocratic and un-American social ...
The Suffering South offers a cultural history of a yellow fever epidemic that swept through the ...
Introduction -- The prophylatic measures -- The local medical organisation -- The citizens' organisa...
Yellow Fever in Tennessee in 1878 by S.R. Bruesh, published in the Journal of the Tennessee Medica...
Throughout the nineteenth century, New Orleans was repeatedly plagued by yellow fever epidemics. In ...
From May to October 1853, the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, battled a terrifying epidemic of yello...
The emergence of germ theory during the nineteenth century transformed Western medicine. By the 1870...
A broadside titled Yellow Fever Treatment. Forewarned---Forearmed published by the Clinton Howard ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 96-100)The American South in the nineteenth century was p...
In ways comparable to the horrors of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath in 2005, the series of yell...
The public health movement in the South began in the wake of a yellow fever epidemic that devastated...
This thesis is a social history of disease and mortality in the American Deep South before the Civil...
For more than a century, yellow fever epidemics intermittently swept over Pensacola, Florida, produc...
The following study is first a demonstration that even incomplete health data from 1878 New Orleans’...
In the nineteenth century, the discussion of personal health and wellbeing became almost a national ...
This thesis argues that what it terms fever narratives figure prominently in Charles Dickens’s ficti...
The Suffering South offers a cultural history of a yellow fever epidemic that swept through the ...
Introduction -- The prophylatic measures -- The local medical organisation -- The citizens' organisa...
Yellow Fever in Tennessee in 1878 by S.R. Bruesh, published in the Journal of the Tennessee Medica...
Throughout the nineteenth century, New Orleans was repeatedly plagued by yellow fever epidemics. In ...
From May to October 1853, the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, battled a terrifying epidemic of yello...
The emergence of germ theory during the nineteenth century transformed Western medicine. By the 1870...
A broadside titled Yellow Fever Treatment. Forewarned---Forearmed published by the Clinton Howard ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 96-100)The American South in the nineteenth century was p...
In ways comparable to the horrors of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath in 2005, the series of yell...
The public health movement in the South began in the wake of a yellow fever epidemic that devastated...
This thesis is a social history of disease and mortality in the American Deep South before the Civil...
For more than a century, yellow fever epidemics intermittently swept over Pensacola, Florida, produc...
The following study is first a demonstration that even incomplete health data from 1878 New Orleans’...
In the nineteenth century, the discussion of personal health and wellbeing became almost a national ...
This thesis argues that what it terms fever narratives figure prominently in Charles Dickens’s ficti...
The Suffering South offers a cultural history of a yellow fever epidemic that swept through the ...
Introduction -- The prophylatic measures -- The local medical organisation -- The citizens' organisa...
Yellow Fever in Tennessee in 1878 by S.R. Bruesh, published in the Journal of the Tennessee Medica...